I don’t really agree, because I think there’s something of a chicken-and-egg effect here.
With complex projects like these that have to work well on such a wide array of hardware and configurations, lots of real world usage is required to achieve any level of refinement. Without widespread adoption, Wayland likely would have been stuck in experimental/toy status for much longer than it will as things are going currently.
With complex projects like these that have to work well on such a wide array of hardware and configurations, lots of real world usage is required to achieve any level of refinement. Without widespread adoption, Wayland likely would have been stuck in experimental/toy status for much longer than it will as things are going currently.